Why Radio?
Transcription
Why Radio?
Radio Astronomy Intro ASRAS Intro RT home Why Astronomy & Radio A Brief History Light is Light APixel is a Pixel Projects Disclaimer; The Radio Astronomy section of the ASRAS web page is under (constant) construction, so please bear with us as we learn how to design effective web pages. Thanks - Mjp Images courtesy of NRAO, SARA & NSF ASRAS Home Today, the fields of Astronomy & Radio are tightly linked. From the time of Galileo (1609) people have peered into the heavens looking through glass. In 1897 Marconi sent his first ‘wireless (radio) telegram’ message. Who would have thought that a mere 31 years later (1934) these two disciplines would stumble across each other and create the most powerful tool with which to understand our very existence and place in the universe. ASRAS Intro RT home Why Radio ? A Brief History Light is Light A Pixel is a Pixel Why Radio? - Atmospheric Absorption Projects ASRAS Home Page Only visible and radio waves make it to the ground, X-rays, UV, IR etc. get absorbed by our atmosphere. With Lake Ontario just to our north, Rochester easily makes the top ten cloudiest cities in the US at # 6. But don’t feel too bad, Lake Erie makes our neighbors to the west (Buffalo) comes in at # 3. You just can’t use an optical telescope when its cloudy, so….. Switch to a longer wavelength :-) A Brief History ASRAS Intro RT home Why Radio ? A Brief History Light is Light A Pixel is a Pixel Projects ASRAS Home Page 1928: Karl Jansky—Bell Laboratories 1928: Karl Jansky - Bell Laboratories In 1928 Karl Jansky started working on a long wire antenna for Bell Laboratories to create a transatlantic Radio Telephone Service to Europe using the 20.5 Mhz band. Results were erratic as they encountered a ‘hiss’ that repeated exactly every 23 hrs. & 56 min (NOT 24 hrs.). Furthermore, the baseline noise level, repeated & tracked each month in every year. Unknowingly, they were receiving celestial radio emissions from planets, The Sun, stars, galaxies, etc. The reason for the 23 hrs. 56 min. repeat, was that’s exactly how long it takes for the Earth to make one complete revolution on its axis (not 24 hrs.). Additionally, the baseline repeat each month of 1943: Grote Reber - Chart Record & Survey the year was that their antenna was pointed to a different deep sky location (for the same reason you don’t see the constellation Orion in the summer & Scorpius in the winter), and they were receiving synchrotron radiation from the cosmic ray background (CMB) . A bright grad student, and avid ham radio operator, Grote Reber wanted to join this team to continue this work. But alas, the project was canned & Grote Reber he was not hired. Undaunted, Grote built a dish antenna 1911—2002 in his mother’s back yard of suburban Chicago then added a chart recorder to give him a hardcopy record of Grote Reber Karl Jansky his experiments. He had to switch to evening work, as there was too much interference during the day from car ignitions, and industry. I’m sure he raised some suspicions from the neighbors & government as the year was 1943! But it helped to put Ham Radio research on the map during and after WW II. ASRAS Intro RT home Why Radio ? A Brief History Light is Light A Pixel is a Pixel Projects A light wave is a light wave no matter how long Light, X-Rays, Radio, etc. are all part of the Electro-Magnetic (EM) Spectrum of energy. Light has two major properties, particles (photons) and wavelength (like waves crashing periodically on a beach). The radio that you listen to, the microwave that cooks your dinner, the color of a red rose, even the X-Rays used in the hospital when you break a leg are all the SAME, they only vary in wavelength. Your eyes, then are really tiny radio receivers. Regardless of wavelength all EM waves travel at the same speed 186,000 miles per second! How many seconds in a year (31,536,000) x 186,000 = 1 light year. Our nearest neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy is about a mere 2.6 million light-years away. ASRAS Home Page Radio Image Data A Pixel is a Pixel — Except when you don’t have enough of them ASRAS Intro RT home Why Radio ? A Brief History Light is Light A Pixel is a Pixel Projects A pixel is the smallest piece of a digital photo describing the picture you’re looking at. A typical digital camera has 7 to 10 Mega Pixels (million). We’ve all been disappointed by a grainy photo. This is also what drives HD video television having finer detail (720 or 1080). A radio astronomer takes a ‘picture’ of the ‘radio sky’ one pixel at a time, then re-assembles them in a computer to create an ‘image’. The example shown (at right) is a ‘wire frame’ model of two peaks with a shallower one in between. The computer can then apply a ‘false color’ to the data to make it a appear as a ‘visual image’. The image below is shown in the visible spectrum (top), then the 21 cm (1.42 Ghz) radio spectrum of Hydrogen emission. Notice the radio waves ‘see’ right through the dark ‘dust’ lanes that block visible light. This is another advantage of radio, it can penetrate otherwise obscured celestial structures. ASRAS Home Page Project List ASRAS Below is a list of our projects; The first two are in the build stage at Ionia, the 3rd in design. IBT—Itty Bitty Telescope Intro RT home All things made up of atoms give off some amount of heat. Living plants, people, etc. This project consists of using a surplus satellite dish to measure this energy. It’s a great learning outreach tool for school, scouts, science fairs, etc. Why Radio ? A Brief History Light is Light A Pixel is a Pixel More details... Projects Solar Spectrograph—eCallisto & Radio Jove This small dish (7ft.) is used to study radio emissions from both the Sun and Jupiter. A low noise ‘front end’ amplifier feeds a modified TV tuner to create a computer controlled spectrum analyzer. Data is recorded as a spectrograph plot (example below). ASRAS Home Page More details... IRTP—Ionia Radio Telescope Project This major project consists of a 20’+ dish, tied to a sensitive 1.42Ghz (21 cm) front end amplifier & tuner, meant to measure hydrogen emissions from celestial objects. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe. All stars ‘burn’ hydrogen at some point in their lives. Most all stars & galaxies have substantial radio emissions in the 1.42 Ghz (21 cm) band. Due to its size this unit only moves in (Dec) declination (elevation) and Earth’s rotation provides movement in the Right Ascension (RA) east to west direction. TBD For future use More details... More details... TBD